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Low-Power Design: How Low Is Enough?

The portable power application space is broad and diverse. Products range from wireless sensor nodes (WSNs) that consume average power measured in microwatts to cart-based medical or data acquisition systems with multi-hundred watt-hour battery packs.

Yet despite this variety, a few trends emerge. Designers continue to demand more power in their products to support increased functionality. They also look to charge the battery from any available power source.

The first trend requires increased battery capacities. Unfortunately, users are often impatient. These increased capacities must be charged in a reasonable time, which leads to increased charge currents. The second trend requires tremendous flexibility from the battery charging solution.

Consider modern handheld devices. Consumer and industrial devices alike may include a cellular phone modem, a Wi-Fi module, a Bluetooth module, a large backlit display, and much more. The power architecture of many handheld devices mirrors that of a cell phone. Typically, a 3.7-V lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery is used as the primary power source due to its high gravimetric (Wh/kg) and volumetric (Wh/m3) energy density.

In the past, many high-powered devices used a 7.4-V Li-ion battery to reduce current requirements. The availability of inexpensive 5-V power management ICs, though, has pushed more and more handhelds to the lower-voltage architecture. The tablet computer illustrates this point well.

A typical tablet incorporates significant functionality along with a very large (for a portable device) screen. When powered from a 3.7-V battery, the capacity must be measured in thousands of milliamp-hours, such as 2200 mAh. Charging such a battery in hours requires thousands of milliamps of charge current.

However, this high charge current does not prevent consumers from also wanting to charge their high-powered devices from a USB port if a high-current wall adapter is not available. To satisfy these requirements, a battery charger must be able to charge at a high current (>2 A) when a wall adapter is available, but still efficiently make use of the 2.5 W to 4.5 W available from USB.

Furthermore, the product needs to protect sensitive downstream low-voltage components from potentially damage-causing overvoltage events and seamlessly direct high currents to the load from a USB input, a wall adapter, or the battery while minimizing power loss. This represents an excellent opportunity for battery IC manufacturers to develop an IC to safely manage the battery-charging algorithm and monitor critical system parameters.

At the other end of the power spectrum are the nanopower conversion requirements of energy harvesting systems such as those commonly found in WSNs that necessitate the use of power conversion ICs, which deal in very low levels of power and current. These can be dozens of microwatts and nanoamps of current, respectively.

An Energy Harvesting WSN

There is plenty of ambient energy in the world around us. Conventional approaches to energy harvesting have involved solar panels and wind generators. New harvesting tools, though, allow us to produce electrical energy from a wide variety of ambient sources. Also, the energy conversion efficiency of the circuits isn’t what’s important. Rather, it’s more the amount of “average harvested” energy that is available to power it.

For instance, thermoelectric generators convert heat to electricity, piezo elements convert mechanical vibration, photovoltaics convert sunlight (or any photon source), and galvanics convert energy from moisture. This makes it possible to power remote sensors, or to charge a storage device such as a capacitor or thin-film battery, so that a microprocessor or transmitter can be powered from a remote location without a local power source.

In general terms, the necessary IC performance characteristics needed for inclusion and use in the alternative energy market include:

• Low standby quiescent currents, typically less than 6 µA and as low as 450 nA

• The ability to harvest energy from as little as 1°C temperature delta

• Compact solution footprints with minimal external components

WSNs are basically self-contained systems consisting of some kind of transducer to convert the ambient energy source into an electrical signal, usually followed by a dc-dc converter and manager to supply the downstream electronics with the right voltage level and current. The downstream electronics consist of a microcontroller, a sensor, and a transceiver.

When trying to implement WSNs, you should ask how much power you need for operation. Conceptually, this would seem fairly straightforward. But in reality, it is a little more difficult due to a number of factors.

For instance, how frequently does a reading need to be taken? Or, more importantly, how large will the data packet be, and how far does it need to be transmitted? This is due to the transceiver consuming approximately 50% of the energy used by the system for a single sensor reading. Several factors affect the power consumption characteristics of a WSN’s energy harvesting system.

Of course, the energy provided by the energy harvesting source depends on how long the source is in operation. Therefore, the primary metric for comparison of scavenged sources is power density, not energy density. Energy harvesting is generally subject to low, variable, and unpredictable levels of available power so a hybrid structure that interfaces to the harvester and a secondary power reservoir is often used.

The harvester, because of its unlimited energy supply and deficiency in power, is the energy source of the system. The secondary power reservoir, either a battery or a capacitor, yields higher output power but stores less energy, supplying power when required but otherwise regularly receiving charge from the harvester.

In situations when there is no ambient energy from which to harvest power, then, the secondary power reservoir must be used to power the WSN. Of course, from a system designer’s perspective, this adds a further degree of complexity since the designer must now consider how much energy must be stored in the secondary reservoir to compensate for the lack of an ambient energy source. Just how much will be required will depend on several factors. These will include:

• The length of time the ambient energy source is absent

• The duty cycle of the WSN—that is, the frequency with which a data reading and transmission has to be made

• The size and type of a secondary reservoir (capacitor, supercapacitor, or battery)

• Whether enough ambient energy is available to act as both the primary energy source and have sufficient energy left over to charge up a secondary reservoir when it is not available for some specified period

Ambient energy sources include light, heat differentials, vibrating beams, transmitted RF signals, or just about any other source that can produce an electrical charge through a transducer (see the table).

A Nanopower IC Solution

WSNs have very low levels of energy available. This, in turn, means the components used in the system must be able to deal with these low power levels. While this has already been attained with the transceivers and microcontrollers, on the power conversion side of the equation, there has been a void.

Linear Technology introduced its LTC3388-1/-3 to specifically address this requirement.

This 20-V input capable synchronous buck converter can deliver up to 50 mA of continuous output current from a 3- by 3-mm (or MSOP10-E) package (see the figure). It operates from an input voltage range of 2.7 V to 20 V, making it ideal for a wide range of energy harvesting and battery-powered applications including “keep-alive” and industrial control power.

Power ICs from milliwatts to over 1 W address a broad spectrum of applications.

The LTC3388-1/-3 utilizes hysteretic synchronous rectification to optimize efficiency over a wide range of load currents. It can offer over 90% efficiency for loads ranging from 15 µA to 50 mA and only requires 400 nA of quiescent current, enabling it to provide extended battery life. The combination of its 3- by 3-mm dual flat no-lead (DFN) package (or MSOP-10) and only five external components offers a very simple and compact solution footprint for a wide array of low-power applications.

The LT3388-1/-3’s accurate undervoltage lockout (ULVO) feature disables the converter when the input voltage drops below 2.3 V, reducing quiescent current to only 400 nA. Once in regulation (at no load), the LTC3388-1/-3 enters a sleep mode to minimize quiescent current to only 720 nA. The buck converter then turns on and off as needed to maintain output regulation.

An additional standby mode disables switching while the output is in regulation for short-duration loads, such as wireless modems, that require low ripple. This high-efficiency, low-quiescent-current design is ideal for applications, such as energy harvesting, that require long charging cycles accompanied by short burst loads for powering sensors and wireless modems.

Conclusion

Portable applications and energy harvesting systems have a broad range of power levels for their correct operation, from microwatts to greater than 1 W. However, many power conversion ICs are available. Yet the choice becomes limited at the lower end of the power range where nanoamps of currents need to be converted.

Fortunately, the LTC3388-1/-3 monolithic buck converter’s extremely low quiescent current makes it ideal for low-power applications. A quiescent current of less than a microamp prolongs battery life for keep-alive circuits in portable electronics and enables a new generation of energy harvesting applications such as WSNs.

Tony Armstrong is the director of product marketing at Linear Technology Corp. He can be reached at [email protected].